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IceNode: A Buoyant Vehicle for Acquiring Well-Distributed, Long-Duration Melt Rate Measurements Under Ice ShelvesAntarctic ice shelves buttress the Antarctic Ice Sheet from sliding into the ocean and significantly raising global sea level. However, the accelerating dynamics of ice shelf melt in a warming environment are poorly understood, and the collapse of Antarctic ice shelves remains one of the largest sources of uncertainty in global sea level rise projections. The cavities below Antarctic ice shelves are notoriously difficult to access, making model-based hypotheses about the relationship between ocean warming and greater ice shelf melting difficult to verify because of a lack of in-situ data to constrain model parameters and examine key assumptions. We present early progress on IceNode, a novel vehicle under development at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory designed to acquire well-distributed, concurrent, long-duration melt rate measurements under ice shelves. IceNodes are deployed as an array from a ship at the shelf edge, and use variable buoyancy to ride melt-driven exchange currents far into the cavity. Once underneath their target, they release a ballast weight to become highly positively buoyant and attach to the underside of the ice shelf, where they acquire in-situ measurements of basal melt rate directly at the ice-ocean interface for a year or more. Finally, IceNodes detach from their landing structure and use variable buoyancy to ride melt-driven exchange currents back to open water, where they surface and transmit their mission data home. IceNodes are designed to be relatively low-cost, expendable, and have simple logistics, enabling scientists to deploy scalable arrays that simultaneously measure co-varying ice shelf melt and ocean conditions over large spatial areas, thereby providing an unprecedented view of ice shelf melt rate variability and its drivers.
Document ID
20230007003
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Zapien, Xavier
Wolsieffer, Ben
Vander Hook, Joshua
Stanton, Timothy
Schoelen, Dane
Schodlok, Michael
Schachter, Justin
Santos, Brendan
Rossi, Federico
Rignot, Eric
Okamoto, Tyler
Nguyen, Kelly
Mechentel, Flora
McGarey, Patrick
Madhok, Gauri
Limonadi, Daniel
Kourchians, Ara
Gebara, Christine
Fenty, Ian
Castano, Rebecca
Branch, Andrew
Clark, Evan Block
Date Acquired
September 20, 2021
Publication Date
September 20, 2021
Publication Information
Publisher: Pasadena, CA: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2021
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Technical Review

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